The libMesh library provides a framework for the numerical simulation of partial differential equations using arbitrary unstructured discretizations on serial and parallel platforms. A major goal of the library is to provide support for adaptive mesh refinement (AMR) computations in parallel while allowing a research scientist to focus on the physics they are modeling.

libMesh currently supports 1D, 2D, and 3D steady and transient simulations on a variety of popular geometric and finite element types. The library makes use of high-quality, existing software whenever possible. PETSc or the Trilinos Project are used for the solution of linear systems on both serial and parallel platforms, and LASPack is included with the library to provide linear solver support on serial machines. An optional interface to SLEPc is also provided for solving both standard and generalized eigenvalue problems.

The libMesh library was first created at The University of Texas at Austin in the CFDLab in March 2002. Major contributions have come from developers at the Technische Universität Hamburg-Harburg Institute of Modelling and Computation, and recent contributions have been made by CFDLab associates at the PECOS Center at UT-Austin, the Computational Frameworks Group at Idaho National Laboratory, NASA Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center, Akselos, Inc., and the Patera research group at MIT. The libMesh developers welcome contributions in the form of patches and bug reports (preferably with a minimal test case that reliably reproduces the error) to the official mailing lists, or via Github issues and pull requests.

Many thanks to GitHub for hosting the project. You can find out what is currently happening in the development branch by checking out the Git Logs online, and you can see how many people are downloading the library on the statistics page.